US Economy in Adverse Case of FED.?

The Financial Development Report 2012

Latest FOMC Minutes

World Economic Forum ' Transparency for Inclusive Governance'

Alan Greenspan ' Fiscal Cliff is Painful '

Showing posts with label Investment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Investment. Show all posts

Friday, January 20, 2012

Indian Government cashes on Gold Rush

The Phenomenal rise in Gold Price and its entry as a Investment Vehicle in the Last decade attracted many towards the precious metal. The Gold ETF's across the India became flavour and favour. Inspite, this rise the Indian Gold demand remain inelastic and more so Price Inefficient. In Mid 60s till mid 90s Gold remained as the Smuggler's Favourite and M/s Hajji Mastan and Co made a Huge moral victory by smuggling gold over drugs.
Mr Yashwant Sinha then finance Minister lowered the custom duty on Gold. 2001-2002:"In order to discourage smuggling I propose to reduce the duty on gold from Rs 400 per 10 grams to Rs 250 per 10 grams."- Yashwant Sinha.
Well, then Gold was trading at much Lower Price @ $ 300 per Ounce and RS 6000 about in Indian Currency .



The Call of Duty
In a bid to match the import duty with rising prices, the government trebled the customs duty on import of gold by increasing the duty twice by Rs. 100 each time, during the Fiscal Year 2009-10.

On 17th January 2012 the government again changed the import duty and it has been set at 2% of value from the earlier import duty of flat Rs 300 per 10 grams. This means, at current price of Rs. 27,700 (rounded-off current gold price) for 10 grams of gold, while you used to pay Rs. 300 as customs duty, it will now increase to Rs.560 (approximately) per 10 grams. In other words, customs duty which amounted to 1.08% at current prices has increased to 2% of value; nearly double of the tariff.

What made the government raise the import duty on gold again? Here are a few probable reasons...

One, India is the world's largest consumer of gold and most of the gold demand is satisfied through imports. As consumption of gold increased, the value of gold imports also saw a rise. We know that higher imports require higher foreign exchange to pay for the import bill, causing a strain on the country's trade balances. Higher imports and rising gold prices worsened the rising trade deficit issue. As per December 2011 data, gold and silver imports grew at 53.8% to $45.5 billion.

Is Gold an Investment for Indians..?
Traditionally, Yes and quite wisely Gold is called Woman's Wealth ( Stree Dhan ). Its exchangeable and posses highest liquidity otherwise remains static in Value. Surely, No one has ever called it as trader's paradise.  

Does it make economic sense..
I think Gold at this price of Rs 27000/ looks tad costly but at Rs 20000 sure is a Buy.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Mutual Fund fundas for all




The  Mutual fund basics are not only theory but its real edge for investors who want to build there portfolio alongwith the various cycles in economic activities and investment gyrations.










Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Investment Basics and herding the Risk










Teaching to the Test
  • Many managers are focused on beating benchmarks, rather than helping clients achieve their investment objectives. Clients save and invest their money for specific reasons, such as for retirement or children’s education and managers should focus on helping them meet those goals.
  • Many managers are really “closet indexers” masquerading as active managers while charging premium fees for benchmark returns. Many equity managers deviate very little from their benchmark because they are terrified of potentially underperforming it.
  • All of our active equity strategies are unconstrained relative to typical equity strategies. We go anywhere across the globe looking for the best investment opportunities and the best risk-adjusted returns. We are not closet benchmarkers. We invest aggressively in our best ideas.
Most people agree America’s K-12 education system needs a lot of help. Too many students drop out of school, and too many of those who do finish graduate without proficiency in math, reading and science.
 
An intense debate is taking place among education policy experts as to the merits of rigorous academic testing to make sure students are on track, to identify and reward schools and teachers who are succeeding, and to identify and replace those who are failing. This is related to the mantra from management guru Peter Drucker, “If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.”
 
Critics of testing argue such quantitative assessments lead to unintended consequences. For example, they believe teachers are incentivized to “teach to the test,” which results in students who are able test takers but lacking in other social, cultural and interpersonal skills that are necessary for success in life.
 
I will reveal my bias: If our biggest educational challenge is that all of our students graduate from high school having successfully been “taught to the test” – Hallelujah! It will mean all of our students actually can read and actually have basic math and science skills. Even if they aren’t all budding creative writers, this is far better than the current state of American education.
 
Teaching to the test is helping China and India produce many talented students who are performing well in our best graduate schools – and going on to become successful entrepreneurs, doctors, engineers and scientists.
 
However, not all of the unintended consequences of rigorous academic testing are positive. Recent revelations that some teachers cheated by changing their students’ answers on tests are deeply troubling. This is worse than Bernie Madoff, who, in the analogy of “teach a man to fish…,” stole an awful lot of fish. Teachers who cheat their students are stealing their students’ fishing poles. They should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And if teachers cheating students isn’t breaking current law, Congress should pass a new law.
 
So what does this have to do with equity investing, you might ask yourself? There is a parallel to “teaching to the test” – it is “managing to the benchmark,” the traditional approach stubbornly adhered to by many equity managers. Contrary to the clear evidence of benefits of teaching to the test, in equity investing such positives are hard to find.
 
Many academic studies, as well as highly regarded industry figures such as index fund pioneer John Bogle, have argued that equity managers often struggle to beat equity indices, such as the S&P 500. They argue that investors should stop trying to beat the market, but instead just select the cheapest fund that tracks the benchmark.
 
In response to these findings, the active equity mutual fund industry has fundamentally restructured itself around an almost singular mission: to try to demonstrate that active management can, in fact, beat benchmark returns in order to justify charging premium fees for active stock selection. Regular measurement of equity fund performance against index returns has become the primary tool in proving managers’ worth.
 
Objectively assessing whether managers are earning their fees is a good thing – but, as with all measurements and incentives, there are often a number of unintended consequences. Let’s explore specific examples:
1) Many managers are focused on beating benchmarks, rather than helping clients achieve their investment objectives.
Success has now been defined as beating a benchmark. Managers are promoted and firms are rewarded when managers outperform the equity market in a given time period. But this framework loses focus on clients and their objectives. Clients save and invest their money for specific reasons, such as for retirement or children’s education.
 
Did a manager who lost 34% in 2008 while the S&P 500 fell 37% do a good job of protecting his client’s assets? Did he control risk effectively?
 
Managing to the benchmark would say, “Yes, job well done.” Common sense would say, “No.”
2) Many managers are really “closet indexers” masquerading as active managers while charging premium fees for benchmark returns.
Many equity managers deviate very little from their benchmark because they are terrified of potentially underperforming it. The stated thesis of most active equity managers is to dig deeper, to unearth investment opportunities that the market hasn’t yet appreciated. Managers try to get to know companies, their competitors, suppliers and customers better than other investors in order to determine who will do well, and avoid those who will do poorly. But many active equity funds have 150 or more individual stock holdings; some have 200 or more stocks. 
 
Can a manager really understand the detailed business models and changing competitive positions of all 150 or 200 stocks in her portfolio? This is highly unlikely, if not impossible.
 
Hence, many managers are reducing their risk of underperforming their benchmarks by buying more and more stocks, and, as a result, knowing less and less about each of them. In doing so, they usually end up just tracking the benchmark – or even worse, lagging it – while still charging premium fees.
 
Some managers will only consider buying a stock if it is included in their benchmark. This artificially limits their hunting ground to the sparsest part of the market where the companies are best known by the most investors.
 
In a 2010 review of active equity mutual fund managers, Professor Antti Petajisto of Yale found “weak performance across all actively managed funds, with the average fund losing to its benchmark by –0.41%. The performance of closet indexers is predictably poor: They largely just match their benchmark index returns before fees, so after fees they lag behind their benchmarks by approximately the amount of their fees. The only group adding value to investors has been the most active stock pickers, which have beaten their benchmarks by 1.26% after fees and expenses.”
3) Risk has been redefined in terms of managers rather than clients.
Equity managers today often define “risk” relative to their benchmark. For example, healthcare makes up 12% of the S&P 500. A manager who has a healthcare allocation of 7% or 17% of his portfolio is said to be taking more active risk than one who has a 12% allocation, who is, in theory, taking no risk.
 
But is this really true? Are clients really more or less likely to achieve their investment goals, or more or less likely to lose money, because of a 7% or 17% healthcare allocation just because the benchmark happens to have 12%?
 
Or is that benchmark-centered framework designed to minimize the career risk of the manager? Certainly the 7% or 17% healthcare allocation will increase the tracking error for the fund relative to the S&P 500. That increases the likelihood that the manager will be deemed either a hero or goat at the end of the year. But what does it have to do with the risks clients are taking in achieving their investment objectives? Nothing.
4) Managers are rewarded for launching as many funds as possible.
Another unintended byproduct of managing to benchmarks is even more pernicious: the proliferation of mutual funds and mutual fund awards. In full disclosure, PIMCO has won many of these awards. But every year, thousands of awards are made to equity managers by prestigious firms largely based on recent performance delivered relative to benchmarks. For example, in 2010 Lipper granted over 1,500 awards globally (1,500!) for the best equity mutual funds based on relative performance.
 
This focus on managing to the benchmark incentivizes equity mutual fund firms to launch as many funds as possible, because at least a few are bound to win a few awards. Firms can then buy advertisements in the Wall Street Journal or USA Today declaring themselves a “Mutual Fund Award Winner.” Such a designation can have a powerful effect on potential clients who don’t realize that only a few of their funds won the awards; it provides a halo to the entire firm. 
 
Why do the raters give out so many awards? Because those advertisements that highlight the winners don’t just help the fund managers, they also convey a level of stature to the firms granting the awards. It is a virtuous cycle of back-scratching between the fund managers and the awarding firms. Everyone wins, right? Everyone except for clients. Do these backward-looking awards indicate that clients actually achieved their investment objectives? Not always.
Managing to the benchmark has transformed much of the active equity industry away from helping clients achieve their objectives and toward helping fund managers achieve theirs. While “teaching to the test” aligns incentives between teacher and student, managing to the benchmark unfortunately can lead to an unhealthy divergence of incentives.
 
If managing to the benchmark is flawed, how should clients choose among hundreds of equity managers? For starters, clients should focus on those firms that have the best processes to deliver the desired outcomes.This isn’t easy. It requires work and diligence. But considering how hard clients have worked for their savings or retirement nest eggs, some diligence to decide with whom to invest is prudent.
 
Having entered the active equity industry later than others, PIMCO has had the opportunity to do a lot of basic questioning. As a result, we have developed a series of principles that guide how we invest in equities. And we believe clients will be better off using a framework such as this to decide where, how and with whom to invest:
1) Look at a portfolio in its entirety, rather than just by asset class, and focus on outcomes. What is the goal for this portfolio? 
• We are focused on delivering investment solutions that meet our clients’ needs. We are increasingly offering multi-asset solutions that combine equities, fixed income and other asset classes in one offering.
 
• Many clients appropriately try to diversify across asset classes, but often they don’t realize that many asset classes are correlated. We focus on risk factors rather than asset classes to help ensure portfolios are truly diversified and risks better understood.
2) Determine in which markets passive equity management makes sense, and in which markets active equity management is potentially better. For the index exposure, you may want to buy the fund or ETF with low fees. For the active exposure, choose the manager with the best investment framework. 
• We believe U.S. equity markets, especially large caps, are quite efficient and it is hard to sustainably generate an edge. In this space, the academics and John Bogle are right. It makes sense to use low-cost index products for U.S.-only equity exposure, but selecting a smart benchmark is also important. Market cap–weighted benchmarks are simple but not necessarily smart.
 
• However, we believe global equity markets are less efficient and there is an opportunity to add value through careful active management where managers can invest across borders, geographies and sectors looking for the best opportunities. Hence, all of PIMCO’s active equity strategies are global.
3) For the active management segment of an equity portfolio, actually actively manage the investments. Remove artificial constraints. Don’t hug the benchmark. Go anywhere to find the best opportunities and exploit them.
• All of our active equity strategies are unconstrained relative to typical equity strategies. We go anywhere across the globe looking for the best investment opportunities and the best risk-adjusted returns. We are not closet benchmarkers. We invest aggressively in our best ideas.
 
• Our active equity portfolios are fairly concentrated relative to the approach taken by many other managers – between 50 and 100 stocks in a typical portfolio. Our equity investment process starts with rigorous individual company analysis. And our investment team knows each of the names we invest in exceptionally well. If we didn’t, it wouldn’t be in our  portfolios.
4) Buy companies you want to own and evaluate them in the context of the economic environment in which they operate.
• At PIMCO we have a team of world-class equity investment professionals who tap into our firm’s macro process and global economic insights when evaluating individual equity investment opportunities.
 
• We believe it takes both rigorous individual company analysis and a global macroeconomic framework to successfully manage global equity portfolios, and that’s how we’ve structured our equity investment process.
5) Invest for the long term.
• Given quarterly financial reporting, the 24-hour news cycle, and real-time social media, attention spans seem to be getting shorter and shorter. It is easy to become lost in the constant stream of events affecting global equity markets.
 
• Although we clearly pay attention to near-term market movements, which could create buying opportunities, we are much more focused on how near-term events affect our long-term outlook for the companies we like.
 
 We are buying companies we like at attractive valuations that have strong fundamentals. We are patient investors. We tend to measure our equity holding periods in years, rather than months (or even days or minutes as some do).
6) Manage downside risk.
• As the financial crisis and recent market turmoil has reminded us all, market corrections can be swift, dramatic and can erase years of gains.
 
• Understanding how portfolios respond to unusual circumstances is critical to understanding risk and managing potential downside scenarios. We stress test our equity portfolios against market shocks, and often actively embed “tail risk hedging” in the strategies themselves. While tail risk hedging isn’t free, we believe it can help reduce downside risk and help our clients achieve their investment objectives in a range of market environments.
As a society, we can and should aspire for every single one of our students to receive a good education and become proficient in reading, math and science. Education is not a zero-sum game: Knowledge can be shared widely to everyone’s benefit. 
 
Benchmark-oriented investing, or managing to beat an average, however, is a zero-sum game. Everyone cannot outperform the market; by definition, half must outperform and half must underperform. Reorienting the way we think about equity investing, away from beating a benchmark and toward achieving clients’ objectives, will take time. We look forward to continuing to explore the global equity investment landscape with you in the coming months and years.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Dollar Debasing from Gold Standard : President Nixon

President Nixon declaration of debasing dollar,

It was on this vary day, when President Nixon ended the Age old ‘Gold standard’ valuation of dollar and debased it, to the Fiat Dictate of the Political Rulers. He claimed for 7 International Currency Volatile situations in as many Years and Blamed all that, on the International Monitory Speculators and justifies the action for American Jobs and Inflation. He added an 10% Import tax, to benefit, the American Producers.

The Background for this action was ‘ Vietnam ‘ war and the Misery, And protest ensued.

Well ! The debasement of currencies saw big Volatility in the Gold Prices and bottom in the 2004, there about. The many wars and Alan Greenspan’s Policy tweaking saw Gold rising and falling in a Narrow Grove for many Years.

It was always ignored and Dollar Importance remained. More so due to American Dominance.

International Monitory Fund, remained on the side walk. All Countries followed this ‘ Disorder’ in Great Happiness. The International currencies Trading has now become the Trading Bets and Currencies traded in Derivatives, ETF’S and All Kind of Fictitious Products, for so Called ‘ Hedges’.

The Clock is slowing turning Back to 14Th August 1975…?

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Credit Agencies under Fire from Central Bankers. Risk Management under threat ..?

The Role of credit rating agencies was exposed, during the Lehman Crisis. The Integrity and validity of the standards were put question. In the recent times, the role of credit agencies has again came into discussion, during European Debt Ratings for Greece, Spain et.al. Jean Paul Trichet, ECB Chairman, was candid to blame the Agencies for there Role, for panicking and destabilizing the Debt Markets.  The On Going US Debt Crisis may also evoke a similar response, which is being underplayed for unknown reasons

                                    The ensuing report shows, How the importance of rating Agencies may be cut down in rating US Debts. The risk management shall now on be more difficult..?

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Risk Management & Proxy hedging: Risk as Choice than a Fate

The word ‘risk’ derives from the early Italian risicare, which means ‘to dare.’ In this sense, risk is a choice rather than a fate.—Peter L. Bernstein



                                                                      ( Sebastian Page) contribution to PIMCO

                                             Diversification often disappears when you need it most. Consider this. From January 1970 to February 2008, when both the U.S. and World ex-U.S. stock markets—as represented by monthly returns for the Russell 3000 and MSCI World Ex-U.S. indices, respectively—were up more than one standard deviation above their respective full-sample mean, the correlation between them was −17%. In contrast, when both markets were down more than one standard deviation, the correlation between them was +76% (Kritzman and Li [2010]). Should we expect similar asymmetry going forward? We often hear that we live in a “new normal” world in which markets oscillate between two regimes:” risk on” and “risk off.” In such a world, diversification across asset classes might work on average, but it might feel like having your head in the oven and your feet in a tub of ice—even though your average body temperature is OK, your chances of survival are low.

                                                Investors have long recognized that economic conditions frequently undergo regime shifts. The economy typically oscillates between 1) a steady, low-volatility state characterized by economic growth, and 2) a panic-driven, high-volatility state characterized by economic contraction.
Evidence of such regimes has been well documented in market turbulence, inflation, and GDP growth. In our new-normal world, regime shifts will continue to cause significant challenges for risk management and portfolio construction.
                                                 For example, the recent financial crisis has reinforced the notion that asset class returns are driven by common risk factors, and that risk factor returns are highly regime-specific. Hence, risk factors—as opposed to asset classes—should be the building blocks for portfolio construction (see, for example, Bhansali [2010], Page and Taborsky [2010], and Bender et al. [2010]). Risk factors provide a flexible language with which investors may express their forward-looking economic views and diversify their portfolios accordingly. They include, for example, interest rates, the slope of the yield curve, corporate bond spreads, equity returns, investment style returns (momentum, value, and size), changes in volatility, commodity returns, and changes in liquidity. Practitioners typically measure a portfolio’s exposure to a given risk factor as its sensitivity to the risk factor, that is, when the underlying risk factor moves by x percent, the expected impact on the portfolio’s return is given by the portfolio’s factor exposure times x percent. For example, interest rate durations and equity betas are commonly measured risk factor exposures.

                                                  Why should we care? 
       
                                                 It has been shown that correlations across risk factors are lower than across asset classes, hence, to diversify across risk factors should be more efficient than to diversify across asset classes. Most importantly, diversification across risk factors is more robust to market turbulence. Asset class correlations are typically higher than risk factor correlations because most asset classes contain indirect exposure to equity risk. To complicate things, indirect equity risk is like a virus that remains dormant until the body weakens; it tends to manifest itself during extreme market moves. The equity factor exposure is always there. But in normal times, investors attribute the returns to real estate or hedge funds or private equity as being the result of good alpha decisions, when in reality they are the result of factor betas like equity, and in bad times, they realize they do own equity factor exposure. Investors are often surprised by how seemingly unrelated risky assets and strategies suddenly become highly correlated with equities during a crisis.
Consider the example of the currency carry trade. According to this strategy, the investor sells lower-yielding currencies to invest in higher-yielding currencies. In normal markets (and on average), this strategy has the potential to be profitable because the high interest rate currencies typically do not depreciate enough over a given period to offset the gain from the interest rate differential embedded in the currency forwards. But during “risk off “ panics, which are generally associated with significant equity downturns, the carry trade can produce devastating losses.
                                     Unforeseen market crises are often referred to as tail risk events because of the way they appear on the bell-shaped curves often used to illustrate market outcomes. The most likely outcomes lie at the center of the curve, whereas the unforeseen, less likely events that can wreak havoc on portfolios are plotted at either end—or tail—of the curve. The tail correlation between equities and total returns obtained from being long corporate bond spreads exhibits the same property as the equity-carry trade correlation. The Merton [1974] model explains this relationship based on the firm’s capital structure. This model values equity as a call option on the firm’s assets and debt as a risk-free rate plus a short put option, and it can be used to measure embedded equity exposure in corporate bond portfolios. As a firm approaches default, equity shareholders get “wiped out” and bondholders become, essentially, equity holders.
                                        Overall, during crises, investors that have not directly diversified their risk factor exposures will find themselves holding two crude asset classes: 1) risk assets and 2) nominally “safe” assets (although all investments carry risk). For tail-hedging purposes, these findings can be used to the investor’s advantage. Indeed, proxy hedges such as credit default swap tranches and short carry-trade positions may be cheaper than equity puts and yet still hedge most of the portfolio’s equity factor risk exposure.
In summary, when they seek to diversify their portfolios, a majority of investors don’t think twice before they average their risk exposures across quiet and turbulent regimes. Consequently, much of the time, investors’ portfolios are sub optimal. For example, during the recent financial crisis, correlations and volatilities across asset classes changed drastically, and seemingly diversified portfolios performed poorly.
                                         We suggest a regime-specific approach to portfolio construction and risk management. On average, correlations across risk factors are lower than correlations across asset classes, and risk factor correlations tend to be more robust to regime shifts than asset class correlations. Therefore, a risk factor approach to portfolio construction provides a robust platform for investors to express cyclical and secular macroeconomic views and adapt to regime shifts. Moreover, to view the world in risk factor space may also help investors better understand tail risk and find opportunities for cheap proxy hedging.
                                                                 Sebastian Page

Friday, July 22, 2011

US Default Impact on Banks, Insurances, economy, and ALL

The Standard and Poor's Painting the Picture of Rating and Likely Impact of Selective Defaults :


U.S. insurance:

We could consider placing our ratings on most U.S. insurers on CreditWatch negative (including bond insurers), but not necessarily lower any ratings immediately. We expect that any potential downgrades would occur within 90 days and would average no more than two notches. The most affected subsector of U.S. insurance, in this scenario, would likely be life insurance and multiline insurance--if life insurance is a significant part of the consolidated insurance operation. The impact likely would be smaller for most property/casualty, reinsurance, and heath insurers.

During the financial crisis of 2008-2009, holding company liquidity was, in some cases, insufficient to meet debt maturities. However, we believe the liabilities that would be most at risk in scenario 3 are institutional short-term operating leverage programs, including securities lending, repurchase agreements, dollar rolls (a type of repurchase agreement), and other short-term match-funded businesses that rely solely on the ability to access the short-term funding markets. Over the past two years, balances in these programs have declined because of tightening spreads. Longer-term institutional liabilities, such as global funding agreements, are primary cash flow matched and shorter-term put features are less prevalent now than they were in the late 1990s. Insurers offering variable annuity-guaranteed benefits would be most sensitive to equity market declines, resulting in reserve increases and declining capital bases. However, many of these variable annuity contracts have restrictive withdrawal rights, so declines in equity markets would be less of a risk if the market disruption is temporary.
Global insurance:

The CreditWatch action could extend to non-U.S. insurance groups (including Canada and Bermuda) that have large U.S. operations or U.S. sovereign investment concentrations, although the non-U.S. business would mitigate the impact. The indirect impact outside the U.S. could be marginally more downgrades for insurers with large U.S. operations or exposure to U.S. sovereign investments, although these would probably average no more than one notch. The greatest impact for insurers in Eastern Europe/Middle East/Africa would be in terms of capital adequacy, rather than funding and liquidity. The substantial increase in interest rates and credit spreads would have adverse implications for marked-to-market balance sheets, and weak equity markets would compound this. However, regulatory forbearance could result in little intervention.
U.S. funds:

We could consider placing our PSFRs and FCQRs on funds invested in U.S.-based issuers on CreditWatch negative given the uncertainty an ‘SD’ event would have on the U.S. financial system, investor behavior, and the ratings on issuers in other U.S. sectors (such as banks). Exposures to U.S.-based entities that could warrant a placement on CreditWatch negative include direct issuer exposure and counterparty transactions (such as repurchase agreements and swaps). The action would depend on whether we revise our rating on the U.S. to ‘SD’ and our prospective view of broader market volatility.

We currently rate 814 funds globally. We have PSFRs on 498 funds with approximately $2.5 trillion in assets and FCQR/FVRs (fund volatility ratings) on 316 funds with more than $400 billion. Of the 814 rated funds, approximately 550 are invested in U.S.-based issuers. We could place our ratings on these 550 funds on CreditWatch negative if we were to revise the U.S. rating to 'SD'.

With respect to Standard & Poor’s PSFRs, an ‘SD’ event might cause a material deviation in these funds' NAV per share and could expose them to extraordinarily high redemption requests, which could exacerbate a declining NAV. For any PSFRs that we would place on CreditWatch negative, we would obtain the daily marked-to-market NAV per share and asset balances for the funds to determine the impact of the ‘SD’ rating action and whether a deterioration in the funds' NAV warrants rating actions. If a U.S. downgrade to ‘SD’ caused interest rates and credit spreads to significantly affect the prices of short-term investments and the marked-to-market NAVs of rated funds to drop below the stated bands for each rating category (for example, the minimum NAV for 'AAAm' is $0.9975), then we could take rating actions. For example, if we put our rating on a fund that invests 100% in U.S. Treasuries on CreditWatch negative, and over the course of a week we observed its NAV decrease to $0.9974 from $1.0000 because of widening credit spreads coupled with large redemptions, we would likely downgrade the fund to ‘AAm’ (NAV minimum $0.9970) and keep the rating on CreditWatch negative. Should an NAV drop below $0.995 (that is, break the buck) we would downgrade the fund to 'Dm' because the fund would have failed to maintain its principal value.

Many PSFRs that are currently limited to investments in U.S. Treasury and agency securities have been positioning themselves to deal with an ‘SD’ event by attempting to avoid securities that mature in early August 2011. These funds are also maintaining above-average amounts of overnight liquidity (i.e., 50% in overnight repo) and an overall shorter weighted-average maturity to minimize the impact that spread widening and redemptions would have on their NAVs. Although this strategy puts the funds in a better position to deal with an ‘SD’ event, the ambiguity regarding how the markets would react to such an event would warrant, in our opinion, placing the ratings on these funds on CreditWatch negative.

In this scenario, it's unlikely that we would initially place our ratings on CreditWatch negative for funds that hold only investments that mature in one business day with issuers or counterparties not on CreditWatch negative, as well as for funds that hold exclusively non-U.S. dollar-denominated investments. However, if the market impact of this scenario spreads beyond the U.S. and global issuers across Standard & Poor’s rated universe experience rating actions, we could place our ratings on additional funds on CreditWatch negative.

It is important to note with respect to FVRs that if the ‘SD’ event caused a material loss in the underlying value of a rated fund's holdings and had a prolonged negative impact on the fund's total return profile, we could lower the FVR by one or more categories.
U.S. banks and broker/dealers:

In this scenario, we could place the ratings on confidence-sensitive banks and broker/dealers (for example, those that rely on short-term funding markets) on CreditWatch negative. We could also lower the ratings on debt issued by financial institutions and guaranteed by the FDIC through its TLGP to the senior unsecured rating on each issuing entity. Short-term funding markets would likely seize, and brokers could struggle to pass daily liquidity tests. U.S. Treasuries used as collateral could fall in value, leading to margin calls. Banks would likely struggle to borrow in the interbank market. Falling equity markets and a rise in interest rates could affect the value of balance sheet assets for big banks and broker/dealers. Banks and brokers may also have to pay out redemptions on sponsored funds, which may further deplete cash reserves, and honor drawdowns on committed credit lines, which would further pressure liquidity. Questions about the viability of deposit insurance could lead to runs on banks if the rating on the U.S. remains at 'SD' for several weeks. In response, banks would likely stop uncommitted lending, which could include consumer lending, to conserve liquidity.
U.S. GSEs:

We could lower our debt ratings on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to 'C'--our lowest issue-level rating--to reflect our view of their significant risk of a near-term payment default. We could also lower our rating on the Federal Home Loan Bank System's (FHLB) debt to the lowest system bank’s stand-alone credit profile (because of their joint and several liability) and place the ratings on CreditWatch negative. In addition, we could lower our ratings on the Federal Farm Credit System's debt to its stand-alone credit profile and place the ratings on CreditWatch negative. Furthermore, we could downgrade individual banks in the FHLB and Farm Credit systems to their unsupported stand-alone credit profiles and place the ratings on the banks on CreditWatch negative. The weakening dollar and wider spreads would likely have a significant impact on the funding costs of the GSEs, while the longer-term economic malaise could hurt their operations. Questions about the U.S.’ ability to support Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could have the greatest impact on their funding costs.

As the U.S. sovereign rating rebounds, assuming the U.S. government reiterates its support of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, we would equalize the ratings on the GSEs' debt with the sovereign rating. We would also likely raise the FHLB and Farm Credit debt ratings back to the sovereign level, and we would reevaluate system banks to determine stand-alone credit profiles and levels of support.
U.S. exchanges, clearinghouses, and central securities depository:

We believe the impact on the industry could be high, especially if the rating on the U.S. remains at ‘SD’ for an extended period. As a result, we could keep our ratings on Fixed Income Clearing Corp. (FICC), National Securities Clearing Corp. (NSCC), Options Clearing Corp. (OCC), and The Depository Trust Corp. (DTC) on CreditWatch negative. We do not expect that we would revise our ratings on these four entities to ‘SD’ because we would expect that the sovereign ‘SD’ designation would be short term and that these four financial institutions would continue to meet their clearing and settlement obligations during that time, barring a meltdown of the entire U.S. financial system.

We understand the four ‘AAA’ rated entities and the clearinghouse units of CME Group are taking precautionary measures to protect their financial safeguard systems in the event of broad market disruptions. They are preparing to increase margin and guaranty fund requirements, possibly impose additional intraday margin calls, and curtail risk exposures at member firms experiencing financial duress. In addition, they are conducting "war games," in which they practice closing out positions of large members. Such actions would not be new--they did the same during the 2008-2009 global credit crisis. (During that time, we maintained the ratings on the three rated U.S. clearinghouses and DTC because they fulfilled their clearing and settlement obligations as expected.)
U.S. finance companies:

In general, wholesale funding market disruptions pose the biggest risks to finance companies because most finance companies do not have access to deposits. The immediate issue would be a deterioration in economic and market conditions that affects profitability and could lead to higher cash needs. Factors that could lead to an increase in delinquencies for balance sheet-intensive companies, such as rising unemployment or decreased demand for financial services companies, could pose the most immediate risks. We also think companies that hold assets that need to be marked to market on a regular basis would face substantial difficulties, especially companies in commercial real estate, which, in our opinion, remain under significant pressure.
U.S. traditional asset managers:

Our immediate response could include placing our ratings on asset managers with significant business managing money market funds on CreditWatch negative until we have a better understanding of the impact of any potential redemption activity that could result from an 'SD' event. If the U.S. sovereign ratings remained at ‘SD’ for an extended period, that could lead to significant redemption activity out of money market funds. In addition, a stock market drop could cause managed asset balances to decline across our rated universe because of both redemptions and market depreciation. In the longer term, depending on the severity and duration of the stock market shock, we might need to take negative rating actions on some of the more highly leveraged asset managers if their financial metrics weakened because of a reduction in assets under management, which could adversely affect cash flow from operations.
U.S. alternative asset managers:

We believe that the biggest risk for alternative asset managers would be managing short-term liquidity, consistent with the 2008-2009 financial crisis. We rate a small number of alternative asset managers relative to the industry, and we believe that we could take a few rating actions in the short term. Any rating action would be the indirect result of liquidity issues arising from margin calls triggered by poor performance and asset value declines, coupled with redemption requests from investors at hedge funds. We could experience a bifurcation of alternative managers into those that benefit from the market disruption and those that have to deal with asset value declines, margin calls, and capital outflows. This scenario likely would have a bigger impact on hedge funds than private equity managers, at least in the short term. We could consider rating actions in the case of a broad decline in asset values because many managers generate their revenues based on assets under management.


( All in all, All this would affect 401(K) into a Huge difficulties, $ Index May sink Below 72, and Gold to jump by 7-9%, So on  and So Forth. The Lehmann would appear as small blip in 2008 on Charts ). 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Inter-National Data Summary: US, Europe, Asia-Pacific


U.S.


  • Housing starts jumped 14.6% over May to an annualized 629,000 units in June, the highest level since January. Housing starts are up 16.7% over last June. The reading was much stronger than the consensus expectation of 575,000, though after May starts were downwardly revised to 549,000 (previously 560,000 units). Multifamily starts surged 31.8% over May to 170,000 units. Single-family starts were up 9.4% to 453,000 units. Building permits, a leading indicator for future construction activity, were up 2.5% to 624,000 in June.
  • U.S. existing home sales fell for the third straight month by 0.8% month over month to an annualized 4.77 million units in June, weaker than consensus expectations of an increase to 4.9 million. The 7.0% month-over-month drop in condo/co-op sales to 530,000 units largely explains the overall decline. Single-family sales were flat for the month. Condo/co-op sales are down 18% year over year while single family home sales are down 7.4% year over year. The months' supply of unsold homes rose to 9.5 from 9.1 in May and is still above the six-month historic average. The sales price jumped to $184,300 from $169,300 in May and is up 0.8% over last June.
  • The S&P/Experian consumer credit default rates decreased in June to 2.14% from 2.23% in May and 3.44% a year ago. All loan types saw declines.
  • Industrial production edged up 0.2% month over month in June, which is the first rise seen in two months, offsetting the 0.1% decline in May (previous 0.1% gain). Auto production remained weak again, down 2.0% in June after dropping 1.5% the month before because of continued Japan-related weakness. Manufacturing capacity utilization remained at its May level of 74.4%, and it is still less than the 80-point benchmark rate.
  • Consumer prices (CPI) fell by 0.2% month over month in June, which was a larger drop than the 0.1% decline that the consensus expected, after a 0.2% month-over-month increase was seen in May. Core CPI, excluding food and fuel, was up 0.3% over May, the same rate as in May, though stronger than the 0.2% increase that the consensus expected. On a year-over-year basis, overall CPI is up 3.7%. Core CPI is up 1.6% over last year and is still within the Fed's implicit 1% to 2% comfort zone. Energy prices fell 4.4% month over month but are up 20.1% over last June.
  • The New York Fed Empire State index climbed four points to a disappointing negative 3.8 reading in July, partially offsetting the near 20-point drop to negative 7.8 in June, and still less than zero, indicating contraction, for a second time. New orders edged down to negative 5.6 after plummeting to less than zero (negative 3.6) in June. The employment index dropped again in July to 1.1 from its 14-point plunge to 10.2 the month before. The price readings also weakened.
  • The initial jobless claims fell 22,000 to 405,000 in the week ended July 9 from an upwardly revised 427,000 the week before (was 418,000). Continuing claims climbed 15,000 to 3.727 million for the week ended July 2, though after the week before was upwardly revised to 3.712 million (previously 3.681 million).
  • The U.S. Treasury budget deficit was $43.1 billion in June and narrower than the $68.4 billion deficit seen in June 2010 and the consensus expectation of $65.5 billion. Receipts edged down 0.6% over last June to $249.7 billion, Outlays fell 8.4% year over year to $292.7 billion. The deficit now stands at $970.5 billion for the first nine months of the fiscal year, narrower than the $1.004 trillion deficit for the same period in fiscal year 2010.
  • Oil prices increased to $100 per barrel on (Thursday- midday) from $97.37 per barrel the previous week on rising speculation that debt problems on both sides of the Atlantic would be resolved soon and signs that crude stocks and Natural Gas are shrinking in U.S. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) inventory data showed a 3.7 million-barrel fall in crude stocks, which was larger than the 1.5 million-barrel drop that markets expected. Total product demand was up 1.6% year over year.
  • U.S. bond yields edged down two basis points (bps) to 2.93% on Wednesday (midday), after a disappointing existing home sales report increased worries that the recovery is losing steam. Mortgage rates slipped marginally to 4.54%. Mortgage applications increased to 15.5% during the week ended July 15 following a drop of 5.1% the previous week. The refi index increased by 23.1% from a 6.2% drop the previous week. The purchase index decreased by 0.1% this week, following a decline of 2.6% the previous week.
  • The dollar weakened against most trading partners this week as signs of progress on a U.S. budget deal prompted a rise in risk tolerance. The euro rose to $1.422/€ on Wednesday (midday) from $1.404/€. The yen rose to ¥78.77/$ from ¥79.31/$.
  • LEI rose by 0.03% Month over Month ( see the separate post giving the Details, Dow trading @12735 and Nasdaq@ 2838, S&P 500 @1345   
  • In The Anvil :
    •  S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index (July 26; negative 4.2). Consumer confidence (July 26; 57.0). New home sales (July 26; 0.31 million). Durable orders (July 27; 0.5). Beige Book for FOMC Meeting (July 27). Initial claims (July 28). Advance second-quarter GDP (July 29; 1.7%). Employment cost index (July 29; 0.6). Chicago ISM (July 29; 60.0). Consumer sentiment (July 29; 64.0).

                                                                            Europe :


  • Italy's lower house of parliament approved a EUR48 billion austerity package on July 15, 2011, in record time to calm the increasing contagion fears spreading from the Greek debt crisis. The mix of spending cuts and tax measures is aimed at ensuring the government reaches its target of balancing the budget by 2014.
  • The minutes of the July 6 - 7 meeting of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) revealed a more dovish tone, indicating that any rises in interest rates are being put off into the future.
  • Germany's ZEW index of economic sentiment slipped for the fifth consecutive month to negative 15.1 in July, its lowest level since January 2009, from negative 9.0 in June. Europe's government debt crisis weighed on optimism despite the continuing strength of the German economy.
  • Russian industrial production increased by 5.7% year over year in June. The manufacturing sector, which grew 7.1% year over year during the period, led the growth.
  • The eurozone trade deficit declined to EUR0.6 billion from EUR2.5 billion in April. Exports grew 1.5% month over month in May, faster than April's rise of 0.2%. Meanwhile, import growth slowed to 0.2% from 0.8%.
  • The eurozone inflation rate remained steady at 2.7% in June but continues to remain at more than the target that the European Central Bank set.
  • European Data update is being done separately. Greece Talks are being viewed ... European Markets Closed +ve  cac 3816.25, Dax 7290.14  , FTSE: 5899.89
  •  Flash PMI's from Markit tomorrow and 
    •  EMU industrial orders (July 22). Germany Ifo expectations (July 22). France production outlook (July 22). Italy retail sales (July 22). Germany retail sales (July 25). Germany consumer confidence (July 26). U.K. GDP (July 26). Hometrack house prices (July 26). Germany import price index (July 27). CPI (July 27). Switzerland leading indicator (July 27). U.K. total orders (July 27). Germany unemployment rate (July 28). EMU, U.K. consumer confidence (July 28). U.K. nationwide house prices (July 29). France consumer spending (July 29). PPI (July 29). Spain, EMU CPI (July 29). U.K. consumer credit (July 29). France, Germany, EMU PMI manufacturing (Aug. 1). EMU unemployment rate (Aug. 1). EMU PPI (Aug. 2). France, Germany, EMU PMI services (Aug. 3). EMU PMI composite (Aug. 3). Retail sales (Aug. 3).

                                                                  Japan And Other Asia-Pacific


  • South Korea's central bank left its key interest rate unchanged at 3.25% in its policy meeting held on July 13 because of rising uncertainty on the global economic recovery, including the eurozone debt crisis.
  • New Zealand's economy rose by 0.8% quarter over quarter in the March quarter, stronger than the 0.5% quarter-over-quarter growth in the last quarter of 2010 and consensus expectations of just 0.4% quarter over quarter, owing to the February Christchurch earthquake. The increase was the fastest quarterly expansion since the December 2009 quarter.
  • Singapore's economy contracted 7.8% quarter over quarter in the second quarter, after a 27.2% jump in the first quarter. On a year-over-year basis, the pace of economic growth slowed to a mere 0.4% in the second quarter. The manufacturing sector, where output contracted by 5.5% year over year after a 16.4% year-over-year jump in the previous quarter, led the deceleration.
  • New Zealand consumer prices (CPI) rose 1% during the second quarter, increasing year-over-year inflation to 5.3%. The reading was much stronger than the consensus forecast of an increase of just 0.7% quarter over quarter and 5.1% year over year.
  • India's wholesale price index (WPI) rose by 9.4% year over year in June 2011, up from 9.06% in May.
  • Coming releases:  Retail sales (July 27). Trade balance (July 27). CPI (July 28). Unemployment rate (July 28). Personal income (July 28). PCE (July 28). Industrial production (July 28). Shipments (July 28). PMI (July 28). Housing starts (July 29). Auto sales (Aug. 1). Trade balance (Aug. 4). Leading index (Aug. 5). Current account (Aug. 7). Consumer confidence (Aug. 9).

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Wipro continues dis-appointment drops 4%


Shares of Wipro slipped by more than 4 per cent on the bourses today after the company posted a .1.23 per cent rise in first quarter net profit. 

The country's third largest software exporter Wipro today reported a growth of 1.23 per cent in consolidated net profit for the quarter ended June 30, 2011, to Rs 1,334.9 crore. 

Last year, the company had posted a net profit of Rs 1,318.6 crore for the first quarter, as per international accounting standards. 

Shares of the company opened on a bullish note but soon lost ground and slipped into negative territory. They were trading at Rs 397.45 apiece, down 4.23%, at 11:56 hours on the Bombay Stock Exchange. 

Marketmen said even though Wipro's Q1 numbers beat market estimates, the stock slipped because of profit booking. 

Net income from sales during the reporting quarter stood at Rs 8,564 crore, as against Rs 7,236.4 crore in Q1, FY'11, up 18.34 per cent. 

"We are seeing early signs of positive momentum after the re-organisation. Clients continue to focus on optimising operations, creating new products and getting access to newer markets. We will continue to make investments that bring superior value to our clients as they try to win in this market," Wipro Chairman Azim Premji said in a statement. 

IT services, which contributed 75 per cent to the company's revenues in Q1, FY'12, stood at $1,408 million, a sequential increase of 0.5 per cent and a year-on-year increase of 16.9 per cent. 

The company said it expects its revenues from the IT services business to be in the range of $1,436 million to $1,464 million for the second quarter ending September 30, 2011. 

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Intelligent Investor---- Why Ben Graham .. ?

            Preface to the Fourth Edition
                     By Warren Buffet :

 I read the first edition of this book early in1950, when I was nine-
teen. I thought then that it was by far the best book about investing ever written, I still think so.
        To invest successfully over a lifetime does not require a straso-
spheric IQ, unusual business insights, or inside information. What's needed is a sound intellectual frame work for making decisions and the ability to keep emotions from corroding that framework. This book precisely and clearly prescribes that framework. You must supply the emotional discipline.
         If you follow the behavioural and business principles that Graham advocates--and if you pay special attention to the invaluable advise in Chapters 8 and 20 --you will not get a poor results from your investments ( That represents more of an accomplishments than you might think. ) Whether you achieve outstanding results will depend on the amplitude of stock market folly that prevails during your investing career. The sillier the market's behaviour, the greater the opportunity for the business-like investor. Follow Graham and you will profit from folly rather than participate in it.
To me, Ben Graham was far more than an author or a teacher. More than any other man except my father, he influenced my life. Shortly after Ben's death in 1976, I wrote the following short remembrance about him in the Financial Analysis Journal. As you read the book, I believe you'll perceive some of the qualities I mentioned in this tribute...... Warren Buffet

A Note About Benjamin Graham : Jason Zweig

Who was Benjamin Graham and Why should we listen to him ?

Graham was not only one of the best investor who ever lived; he was also the greatest practical investment thinker of all time. Before Graham, money managers behaved like a medieval guild, guided largely by superstition, guesswork, and arcane rituals. Graham's Security Analysis was the text book that transformed this musty circle into a modern profession.

And The Intelligent Investor is the first book over to describe, the individual investors, the emotional framework and analytical tools that are essential to financial success.
It remains the best book on investing ever written for the general public.

                                                                        ( Benjamin Graham : 1894-1974 )

Personally, I am hugely benefited from the reading of the book and more for trying to adopt some very simple things, which are explained easily in the book.  

My humble tribute to this Great Man..... 


Atul